I do Boxing and even I agree that this takes the Cake. Remember if you Can run from a fight. Just do It. Doesn't Matter if it Hurts your Pride or ego. Trust me you would much rather have ur Pride or ego broken. Rather than your nose...
@@seilaomer8081been in a fair few street fights, (not a street fighter though don’t worry) and couldn’t agree more. A lot of the time you should just run, especially if they seem suspicious or are in a group. If there is absolutely no choice but to fight, usually it’s just best to throw a punch or kick and try find an opening to run away.
I'm not a Capoeirista, but as a Brazilian, I believe I can clear a few things up, since you seem unfamiliar with it. Capoeira was created to look like a dance. African slaves used it to trick the Portuguese colonizers, making them think it was just a cultural thing, but they were actually practicing for combat. So, the music and dance were a disguise. Capoeira is rooted in real combat, it was their way to defend themselves and resist. Today, though, the dance aspect, the "ginga", represents the artistic side of martial art and isn't intended for use in an actual fight.
The definitive martial arts tier list imo: S tier: any martial arts can useful if time an effort is put into its learning and mastery and it can be adapted situationally F tier: McDojo
Some martial arts, objectively isn’t the best for self defence, but martial arts are not only about self defence its also about discipline, will power, commitment and dedication
As a martial artist, I can agree with a lot of these placements, and I agree that some can be used better than others, but I think the best thing you can do is mix and match martial arts, and that would be a video i would like to see. "Which martial art would pair best with karate?" could be a really cool video and I would honestly like to see thoughts on that
I don't think it makes much sense to put boxing and MMA at number 1 and not MT. MT is literally boxing + stuff, just like MMA. Or in other words, boxing is MMA less a lot, MT is MMA less some.
Small note on Lethwei: They don't use gloves, only small wraps if anything at all. For this reason alone I think it should be in the top. Letwei fighters are used to hitting and being hit without anything protecting them, and they are also used to protecting against strikes without gloves, which is different because the fist is actually a lot smaller and harder than with gloves. It's a sport that not many practice, but for self defense it has to be at the top I think.
I do Jiujitsu and I understand why: • BJJ takedowns suck comparing to other grappling. • lack of physical athleticism. • The pace is very slow to learn.
its great that youre so humble and acknowledge you dont know everything, cuz yeah these videos are mostly subjective, heres my opinions, if youre a good practitioner, youll make the martial art youre doing work, but again if youre talking about a guy whos untrained and wants the most efficient self defence out of the martial art, some are def. gonna be at the top like mma muay thai(its S tier cmon), boxing, judo, krav maga(was literally made for self defence, groin strikes, eye pokes are all taught in that) and others at bottom(like aikido XD)
I am actually pleasantly surprised that you put judo in the “probably would work” spot! I love (and practise) judo and hear most people rank it lowly just because we don’t have any punches or kicks. It’s really nice to finally see someone actually appreciate how well it could work in a(n unwanted) fight!
You should make a part 2 of this and rank them based on whats the best a defending yourself without having any serious legal action being put against you. I'd imagine some things are gonna fall down
Just an FYI that the Red Symbol one you mentioned is Kyokushin. Innocently putting that in lower tiers may break the internet! Good rankings though mate!
Muay Thai has clinch, dumps, sweeps, elbows and knees and generally fights can get up close which I would say gives it a leg up to kickboxers and boxers.
I do Muay Thai. I agree that it probably has a leg up against kickboxing just based on the fact that we traditionally use less flashy kicks and have more weapons-- but, and I know this is corny, I think it's entirely based on skill rather than style. However, I don't agree at all that it's above boxing. Muay Thai/Kickboxing's stances are both designed around the idea that we'll be needing to check kicks and deal with elbows/knees. In a street fight, mfers are just gonna be swinging, because of that, boxing's stance, footwork and head movement become much more valuable-- ESPECIALLY so when we consider multiple opponents. I don't really think it matters too much in a 1 on 1 scenario tho, at the end of the day, a good fighter's gonna dog a dude who's never thrown a punch before any day of the week.
@@Drqgn yeah I agree wit u I train Muay Thai as well. I feel like the quicker you can end a fight the better in the street, one good shot could get a knockout and you probally not gon have enough time to set up a kick, but if the fight is close range, depending on the setting and the opponent I still think elbows knees and clinch is useful to stop a fight. A well timed groin kick during some kinda punch combo would still be useful. And I agree with the footwork part and head movement since defense is a major thing in a street fight.
While I do agree a grappler will be disadvantaged against somebody who can strike (though the second they get their hands on them it’s basically over) in a street fight, i prioritise bjj simply because if you are in a position to stand and strike, most of the time, you are in a position to run, which is far more ideal. Whereas if you are taken down, if you don’t have grappling, you could very easily die and you can’t run, so knowing how to defend grappling, lock up a submission, or get back up and run is far more useful for self defence as best self defence is avoiding fights in the first place
Hey nat, just to clear things with arnis/escrima, it is a martial art in the philippines. The martial art had a purpose to incapacitate/kill your opponent as fast as possible, it mostly uses the 2 weapons like in the puctures, but also involves hand combat like karate; Striking, throws, grappling. Philippine military uses this martial art.
I feel like low kicks are over emphasized with muay thai. People seem to forget that muay thai uses elbows too... Most street brawls I have seen start with two people up close, nose to nose almost. Very well in range of an elbow.
Kali-Eskrima-Arnis is Filipino Martial Art and I have done a little bit of training. While it does have a lot to do with weapons, the first belt levels usually start with hand to hand combat.
As someone who does do traditional Japanese Ju-jitsu, I thought I should state that we do strikes and takedowns along with grappling. Since we do all three we do not have a main focus on them, our grappling is not as good as BJJ, our throws are not as good as judo and our strikes are not as good as karate but it seems to be good enough.
I think that there is a component you’re missing when it comes to judging these arts in terms of their effectiveness for self defense. I think the goal of “self defense” is that you are leaving a dangerous encounter as safely as possible, which is not limited to engaging the attacker and defeating them, but also running away. One of the biggest advantages for grappling arts is that if you are attacked, you have the option to run away, and the only way for the attacker to stop you from running is to initiate grappling. This would allow you to take advantage of wrestling, BJJ or judo skills.
on 3:46 i totaly agree with you about boxing, i just wanted to add that you can hit any person doesnt mater what cloth you where is not like if you are a taekwando artist and you have jeans on you and you get into a street fight you are doomed.
Taekwondo and Any Leg Based Martial Art is your worst Enemy, A Bit of Boxing, Taekwondo and Ground Art Like Judo, Jiu Jitsu or Wrestling then Hell yeah
Kudo Is just mma, but with headbutts, that's why the helmet. It has kicks, punches, elbows, knees, throws and submissions. It's just mma, so put it next to it
Feel free to tell you Nat First of all you have to know the difference between Penchak silat and silat. Silat is a self-defense art used in the nusantara where there are many types of silat.while Penchak silat is a sport To highlight the culture and he set very strict rules to keep the game safe .1 point punch, 2 point kick, 3 point fall and when the player leaves the circle if I'm not mistaken it's 2 poin(can correct me if I'm wrong)
Why does Jujutsu go with BJJ for the same reasons? They are completely different things, traditional jujutsu was literally designed as a killing art for samurai. It's not the same pissy rolling around as BJJ
I recommend that as a martial artist you pick an art, assess it's weaknesses, then add another art/arts to your repertoire that covers the weak aspect of your favorite martial art and amplifies it's strengths.
tbh all complex martial arts need a very skilled master to do it , we are just common ppl , we can't do it at that level but once a master starts doing it , you are f ed up bad
I would say "daido juku karate"(kudo) is S tier. headbutt, elbow, low kicks, grappling, full contact. I think kudo is the best form of karate. I like your videos, keep up to good work mate ☺️
I agree on the multiple opponents, but i think in one on one scenarios, something like wrestling would be more effective since getting a takedown is more likely than an immediate k.o
16:10 That is Jeet Kun Do - The hybrid martial art system invented by Bruce Lee. His main philosophy of such was to learn and take something from every style and to be "like water" - Shapeless and formless, with the ability to adapt to any situation
@@nathearn I'd definitely recommend it. Bruce has such a rich tapestry of knowledge and personal philosophy of martial arts and life in general. Given his strong history of studying different styles like Boxing, Karate, Wing Chung, Tai Chi, taekwondo, etc, and how he helped popularise many of them in the west, it makes sense that many martial artists and professional fighters regard him as a strong influence and 'the godfather of MMA', as he layed the groundwork for the idea for Martial artists to branch out and learn different techniques to improve their game as well as themselves. Even the likes of Sugar Ray Leonard and Manny Pacquiao were inspired by him, including how they learned to perfect their jab and maintain rhythm and speed. th-cam.com/video/nzQWYHHqvIw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=RvQsMmtYihQD2RNk
6:03, i agree with the ranking but for different reasons, since muay thai has elbows unlike kickboxing, it obviously is pretty effective to use elbows and we arent just trained to use kicks n stuff but, you can use teeps, clinch, elbows and allat, plus the traditional muay thai stance has the hands facing the opponent but, in european countries they teach you to turn your punches and ur hands dont face your opponent, plus think about all the options of like flying knees, flying elbows, superman punches n stuff, muay thai is like 60% of MMA.
I don't train Krav Maga but sparred against some already and its really hard to judge. Its a military martial art so its focused on destroying your opponent. But most schools teach it different to others so there is no consistency. I got krav maga guys that dominated almost everyone but I got Krav maga guys that would lose to Akaido (sarcasm, no one loses to akaido. But you get the point.)
i feel like aikido heavily suffers from mcdojos because of how focused on using the opponents energy against them. i do aikido and have been doing so for 4 years now and my Sensei who has been practicing for 21 years is one of the most skilled martial artists i’ve ever seen. i think it is all about who trains you and how you train. as you’ve mentioned mcdojos brings down the effectiveness of the art as they become more prevalent and are seen more than proper dojos. all a matter of opinion, overall a good video. good job :)
Yes but the real problem with aikido McDojos goes all the way to the top. I started in aikido like 15 years ago and my aikido has only gotten better by learning other arts. The foundation of Aikido is very shaky right now. I’m glad you’ve found a good sensei.
@@JBIsrael i agree wholeheartedly. with aikido you get to the level of no touch when you are in a mcdojo and that can be very unhelpful to both yourself and the art. i also do Kung-Fu and have found that it enhances what i already know in aikido. as my Sensei says there is only so many ways you can move your body, so all martial arts must have the same principles. i hope you continue to do aikido and improve :) have a good one
I don't want to hate, but the whole reason he said that jiu-jitsu was a 50-50 was because it always went to the ground. I'm not sure if he thinks that they start on the ground. But if you were to watch dignified jiu-jitsu it would be a combination of wrestling and judo. I don't want to seem like one of those people who just sit at their computer all day and make up these crazy stories and talk trash to the creators (again no hate), but some of these are being extremely unfairly ranked.
Nice video, as a krav maga practitioner i can say that that is a right ranking since it's difficult as a beginner to not find a mcdojo, nowdays krav maga became popular, and so the fake teachers. The real krav maga is semplicity and takes concepts from other diciplines.
Nat I think you should look more into Kali or Eskrima more. It's a Filipino martial art mainly using weapons but it also has empty hand combat. In my opinion it's one of the best for self-defense as it also helps when your enemy has a weapon at hand. You can disarm them using this martial art. It also has a blend of Karate, when you look at in a way, it is Filipino Karate. Focusing on fast paced usage of arnis sticks and knives but the same principles also apply in empty hand combat.
Wing Chun is a powerful attack, they do palm strikes which are terrifying in power. They are defensive and counter when you throw a punch, and they aim with punches to your chest to reduce injury. Wing Chun I believe would go in Probably Would Work
I get it, you like Ip man films. But the answer is no. A guy bear hugs you, how are you going to throw that punch or perform any type of style? Even if you can throw that punch, it won't be a Wing Chun punch, but any punch for that matter.
As always, people judge Capoeira without really knowing anything about it. The spinning around thing is the equivalent of a demonstration, sometimes used by more experienced students to help others learn more complex movements, it's a little game from the more cultural aspect of the art. When you fight, you aren't dancing like that, you don't even necessarily need the ginga, there are punchs, grabs, elbows, knees, etc. It's basically MMA with slightly different footwork and more spinning kicks.
My issue with Muay Thai in the US is that they don't really teach defense, it's all about conditioning. Obviously if someone goes to the gym daily and they are serious about their Muay Thai training, they eventually grow to a decent fighter, but for the casual? I don't recommend Muay Thai for the casual, because Muay Thai is a 100% combo sport which is different from self defense. Some of their training methods I also question, they often drill random combos, sometimes with defense drilled in. Other kickboxing styles like Savate and Dutch-kickboxing, they drill the same combo over and over again until you get it down. For self-defense the other kickboxing styles like Savate, Sanda, and Dutch Kickboxing are better. Also I think a legit Karate Dojo is better for self-defense than Muay Thai. In Savate they teach you how and when to strike an approaching opponent, they teach that in Dutch kickboxing as well, they don't teach that in Muay Thai.
@timothysmith1631 Well it depends on the dojo and the style. I think Kyokushin, Uechi-Ryu and Goju-Ryu are really good, and there are dozens of other ones that are good for self-defense. Ashihara kaikan an off-shoot of Kyokushin will make you a good fighter, and Kudo as well. But I also agree your typical Karate gym in the US is not better than Muay Thai for self-defense, but there is also a lot of good gyms, so you have do your research and find them.
I'm from Europe (Moscow) and I'm very surprised that all English-speaking bloggers knew smth about "Systema" martial art. In my country there are no (or maybe very few) clubs of this martial art. It was popularized in 1990s also with "Slavic self-defense", "Martial hopak", "Cossack dvobiy", "Rus' combat", "Kadochnikov's system" etc. freak pseudo-ancient or Russian National martial arts. All of these are forgotten now. More then: due the United Sport Classification systems in all Eastern European countries clubs of pseudo-sports have no chance to become popular because lack of funding, competitions and PR. Their athletes can't parcicipiate in official competitions, get the National Champion title etc.
you missed maybe the most mainly advantage of muay thai in the street... chilnch. not everything always work as you wish and someone can grab you (aspecialy from behind) and its very useful (especialy elbows)
As a BJJ guy, starting from the ground is a giant misconception. Yeah, there are a lot of people who get taught like that, but if you find an actual good coach, you'll learn to do both standing and grounded fighting. The place I train at specifically does BJJ mostly, but there will be nights where we do Muay Thai. I feel like Muay Thai and BJJ is a great combination. That's just me though lol.
Basic Takedowns we learn to put down people are mostly shared techniques either from wrestling or judo, but generally the ones taught for BJJ are on the ground that's why it's always known as the ground martial arts.
18:03 fun fact : pencak silat is the sport/artistic form of silat. Compare it and you'll see the difference And they also do punches but for some reason they don't use it in the video
Hey Nat I just want to thank you for the stretching routine. Bought it about 8 weeks ago and i was one of the least flexible people I knew, but just recently I made the milestone of being able to touch my toes! Still not finished with it though
Wrestling should be s tier. I say this as a judoka. They just train harder and they're the most athletic of any martial art. Your average wrestler is a monster that knows how to suplex you in seconds. Unless you practice anti wrestling you're kind of screwed
Wrestlers know the takedowns for judo like throws trips and sweeps but also adding single, double legs and suplexes and body locks. Also you end the fight by pinning them on the ground when they cannot move anymore. They are very explosive and one slam you’re finished.
Put it like this. A lightweight boxer will struggle to beat a heavyweight random on the street. A lightweight wrestler will absolutely DESTROY a heavyweight random on the street. Watch that video of Bradley Martyn wrestle that one dude. The dude beat him. Now imagine Bradley Martyn vs Devin Haney. Haney gets SMACKED by Bradley.
@@hanzo7616 a middle weight can beat a heavy weight even if they both have skills but if the middle weight is overall better at skill and faster. Better technique too middle weight will win plus middle weight r probs the perfect weight not to heavy but still built well and not light either. Btw I don't think U really wanna grapple with someone who is way bigger than U especially wrestling at light weight🤣
Welcome back Sensei, I hope the travel back to home was not very stressful 😉 I hope you will make another video about your most recent experiences there in the last days of your stay, I can't wait to see👍😉
@@BitoTheNiceGuy Yeah of course Bruce Lee would have developed it over time because of modern scientific knowledge etc. but it‘s was so superior in those days that it is still up to date and very effective for street fighting
@@fuchsroehre9 yes Jeet Kune Do should be in the S tier because it has (Wing Chun, Western Boxing, Western Wrestling, Western Fencing, Indian Wrestling, Judo, Taekwondo, Tai Chi, Choy Li Fut and Eskrima) that's a lot of martial art that was combined together
@@BitoTheNiceGuy Well in the last stage of his Jeet Kune Do it was nearly no Wing Chun anymore. It was mainly boxing with fencing footwork and a little bit of wrestling too. It was just pure science and he used only the most effective aspects of each art.
@@BitoTheNiceGuyBut yeah, obviously S tier because it‘s simple, no classical mess and useless movements. It‘s straight forward and answers almost every kind of attack your can get on the street
Sanda is a Chinese kickboxing style created by the Chinese military using traditional Wushu/ Gong Fu techniques and made it more adapted to modern sport fighting. A lot of the grappling from the style is actually from taijiquan
that's kyokushin karate that red circle with black japanese name, i was waiting for you to rank it because i do it myslef, it's rated most brutal karate style and it's basiclly full contact karate, in compettitions knees,elbows and punches to the face aren't allowed but we train those too (knees and little bit of elbows, punches to the face only basic belt technique)
Very good tier list. I practice Judo as a child, later Boxing and actually Taekwondo Itf and a few of Kickboxing. Im sure that Bjj is not very good in the stree. Put your self in the hard asfalt and with probably other enemy up yours that can kicking easily. Judo is better because use more throws and sweeps, much faster and secure for the user. Boxeo is the best in streets, there are thousand of videos that demonstrate 👏👍💪🥊🥋
BJJ also practices a huge variety of throws and takedowns, you don't have to grapple them on the ground. I'd say BJJ would work quite well on a one on one street fight mainly because you can take them down just as well as judo practitioners whilst also having the techniques to knock them out or break their arm. Even with all this, I still practice kickboxing on the side just incase things get a bit too risky.
Ju-jitsu should be a bit higher because they teach strikes (the leg ones are a bit off) but most people in ju-jitsu can throw a punch and also they can get anyone who doesn’t have a good leg stance on the floor in seconds (most street fights)
Combat sambo is basically russian MMA, you're still allowed to grapple in it and it's more wrestling based. from the information i know, correct me if i'm wrong.
Hey bro original Japanese jiu jitstu has striking sparring weapons. Jiu jitsu is where judo and bjj come from. So you would have to switch the spots of judo and jiu-jitsu.
The civilian version of Krav maga is the most widespread and designed to teach someone to defend themself against basic attacks from an untrained attacker. Yes it is agressive and you'll work from reflexes, but the idea behind it is to use force and get out of the situation asap. That's why most of the civil KM practitioners will lose a fight against a trained striker or grappler. They will block, evade and counterattack
God tier: ameridote Top tier :: Gun-fu ; Run jutsu ; kevlar shirt. Rest martial arts practioner : just to be safe run away. And some others : don't bother just surrender
Nice Rant, Especially about Aikido being in the lowest, I Just Can't Believe That My Dad Forces Me to Believe that Aikido Is Better Than Krav Maga, and Ninjutsu Is Literally Just Avoiding a Fight so I Might've placed It a Little Higher, And The Ninjutsu Moves shown In The Video are Highly Dependent On The Practitioner's Reflex and Speed So I might Agree On You Putting It On Not The Best
17:15 Its kyokushin karate and pencak silat have many variation like PSHT (Persaudaraan Setia Hati Terate), Kera Sakti, PPSNR (Perguruan Pencak Silat Nur Rachmat),PSHW (Persaudaraan Setia Hati Winorogo), Tarung Drajat. And there is have 200+ kinds of Pencak Silat
You just need decent hands, whilst boxing is good - it's not good if you can close the distance or keep them away with push kicks, or get them with kicks. Let's be honest, in a streetfight there are no rules like MMA or others, so you're going to kick, grab, punch all rolled together. If you have some basic knowledge of push kicks, leg kicks, punching and a few throws most martial artists (especially those that compete) in a 1-on-1 situation is likely to be ok.
Grew up with Karate as a third generation practitioner. I've done Muay Thai, Judo, Boxing, Taijutsu, and a tiny bit of Wing Chun. I do respect Aikido, but it's not for combat at all; it's solely for the moments before a fight. Karate 1000% depends not only on the practitioner, but the style as well. Some are designed for combat over form. Muay Thai is made to break the opponent with striking versatility; art of the 8 limbs. Taijitsu is in the same boat as Karate, though strictly designed for combat. Basically, any striking art should be fine in a street fight. I'm not a fan of grappling or taking the fight to the ground in a street fight UNLESS it's a 1v1.
In my much more narrow-minded oppinion(taekwondo,karate and judo),it also HIGHLY depends on your own experience and who are you fighting.In a 1v1 if your opponent does not know any matrial art but is just physically much stronger taking a fight to the ground or grappling is not an option,because risky,no matter how good you are,some grapplings just won`t work if the opponent sees it coming and opposes,unless you are REALLY good.Just throwing the poor dude and running away is in my oppinion better,will work,if your opponent doesn`t know how to oppose some throws or not get into position to be thrown-no chance.Physical power doesn`t matter,weight does,and really good judo guys can throw up to 2-3x own weight.Also(at least in my oppinion) not every striking art can fit to the street fight,ofc hit and run always works great,but reallisically speaking,dudes who attack you are sometimes drunk,and it`s a known fact that drunk people do not feel pain the same way.Basically,if a drunk person is already drunk enough to attack you fo no particular reason,they will fight untill knocked out or physically incapable to.Some striking matrial arts do not provide enough contact for a student to be able to knockout a person no gear without injuring themselves.
@БогданЗмиевской-с2е I'm a heavy advocate for Judo. I merely meant that taking it to the ground as in Jiujitsu is a bad idea mainly because in concrete and the possibility of extra assailants jumping in. But fighting anyone who isn't a good enough fighter, any striking should be good enough to defend yourself.
@@VAPExodus If we are talking a healthy sober agressive human who does not know what he os doing i agree 100%.I would also say that even tho i concider myself quite experienced i will NEVER try to fight back with bare hands in a group v 1 situation,I guess it`s even fair to say that if it is a group of people and you can`t just hit everyone real fast and run only running away works.Anyway,thank you for your opinion.
I'd put Muay Thai at the top (totally hot take, I know) because in my experience, it's taught with street fights in mind and you can stick to the hands if you need to. And BJJ would go lower😂 Also, I think Krav is very underrated here, I'd put it top because not all locks are for the street. They teach to go for the... "places where the sun don't shine" and temples etc. And practical things like how one hit will end most fights - and MANY specific scenarios: I was once there long enough to see in my old "dojo" scenarios for break ins (it totally deserves some skits)
S tier: athletic runner
I do Boxing and even I agree that this takes the Cake. Remember if you Can run from a fight. Just do It. Doesn't Matter if it Hurts your Pride or ego. Trust me you would much rather have ur Pride or ego broken. Rather than your nose...
@@seilaomer8081been in a fair few street fights, (not a street fighter though don’t worry) and couldn’t agree more. A lot of the time you should just run, especially if they seem suspicious or are in a group. If there is absolutely no choice but to fight, usually it’s just best to throw a punch or kick and try find an opening to run away.
Fr just run
I'm not a Capoeirista, but as a Brazilian, I believe I can clear a few things up, since you seem unfamiliar with it.
Capoeira was created to look like a dance. African slaves used it to trick the Portuguese colonizers, making them think it was just a cultural thing, but they were actually practicing for combat. So, the music and dance were a disguise.
Capoeira is rooted in real combat, it was their way to defend themselves and resist.
Today, though, the dance aspect, the "ginga", represents the artistic side of martial art and isn't intended for use in an actual fight.
The definitive martial arts tier list imo:
S tier: any martial arts can useful if time an effort is put into its learning and mastery and it can be adapted situationally
F tier: McDojo
Mcdojo would pay not to get robbed😂😂😂😂
100% spot on.
Some martial arts, objectively isn’t the best for self defence, but martial arts are not only about self defence its also about discipline, will power, commitment and dedication
As a martial artist, I can agree with a lot of these placements, and I agree that some can be used better than others, but I think the best thing you can do is mix and match martial arts, and that would be a video i would like to see. "Which martial art would pair best with karate?" could be a really cool video and I would honestly like to see thoughts on that
MUAY THAI AND JUDO GANG. RISE. WE MUST BECOME NUMBER ONE.
Agreed . A lot of martial arts deserve the number 1 spot
@@tusharbhalla5336kickboxing, muay thai and judo deserve top spot
Muay Thai + Judo gives you Sambo, my friend
I don't think it makes much sense to put boxing and MMA at number 1 and not MT. MT is literally boxing + stuff, just like MMA. Or in other words, boxing is MMA less a lot, MT is MMA less some.
@@JenwiwnowoI love Judo myself ,Muay Thai is great ,but CMA are underrated
Small note on Lethwei: They don't use gloves, only small wraps if anything at all. For this reason alone I think it should be in the top. Letwei fighters are used to hitting and being hit without anything protecting them, and they are also used to protecting against strikes without gloves, which is different because the fist is actually a lot smaller and harder than with gloves. It's a sport that not many practice, but for self defense it has to be at the top I think.
I do Jiujitsu and I understand why:
• BJJ takedowns suck comparing to other grappling.
• lack of physical athleticism.
• The pace is very slow to learn.
3 ways how to survive a street fight
1. Start running
2. Be a absolute tank at MMA or boxing
3. Gun.
its great that youre so humble and acknowledge you dont know everything, cuz yeah these videos are mostly subjective,
heres my opinions, if youre a good practitioner, youll make the martial art youre doing work, but again if youre talking about a guy whos untrained and wants the most efficient self defence out of the martial art, some are def. gonna be at the top like mma muay thai(its S tier cmon), boxing, judo, krav maga(was literally made for self defence, groin strikes, eye pokes are all taught in that) and others at bottom(like aikido XD)
I am actually pleasantly surprised that you put judo in the “probably would work” spot! I love (and practise) judo and hear most people rank it lowly just because we don’t have any punches or kicks. It’s really nice to finally see someone actually appreciate how well it could work in a(n unwanted) fight!
You should make a part 2 of this and rank them based on whats the best a defending yourself without having any serious legal action being put against you. I'd imagine some things are gonna fall down
Just an FYI that the Red Symbol one you mentioned is Kyokushin.
Innocently putting that in lower tiers may break the internet!
Good rankings though mate!
Yeah I know that now, it would not have been placed in that tier if I knew then😂🤝
@@nathearnin what tier would you put properly trained karate
Muay Thai has clinch, dumps, sweeps, elbows and knees and generally fights can get up close which I would say gives it a leg up to kickboxers and boxers.
I do Muay Thai. I agree that it probably has a leg up against kickboxing just based on the fact that we traditionally use less flashy kicks and have more weapons-- but, and I know this is corny, I think it's entirely based on skill rather than style. However, I don't agree at all that it's above boxing. Muay Thai/Kickboxing's stances are both designed around the idea that we'll be needing to check kicks and deal with elbows/knees. In a street fight, mfers are just gonna be swinging, because of that, boxing's stance, footwork and head movement become much more valuable-- ESPECIALLY so when we consider multiple opponents. I don't really think it matters too much in a 1 on 1 scenario tho, at the end of the day, a good fighter's gonna dog a dude who's never thrown a punch before any day of the week.
@@Drqgn yeah I agree wit u I train Muay Thai as well. I feel like the quicker you can end a fight the better in the street, one good shot could get a knockout and you probally not gon have enough time to set up a kick, but if the fight is close range, depending on the setting and the opponent I still think elbows knees and clinch is useful to stop a fight. A well timed groin kick during some kinda punch combo would still be useful. And I agree with the footwork part and head movement since defense is a major thing in a street fight.
While I do agree a grappler will be disadvantaged against somebody who can strike (though the second they get their hands on them it’s basically over) in a street fight, i prioritise bjj simply because if you are in a position to stand and strike, most of the time, you are in a position to run, which is far more ideal. Whereas if you are taken down, if you don’t have grappling, you could very easily die and you can’t run, so knowing how to defend grappling, lock up a submission, or get back up and run is far more useful for self defence as best self defence is avoiding fights in the first place
Hey nat, just to clear things with arnis/escrima, it is a martial art in the philippines. The martial art had a purpose to incapacitate/kill your opponent as fast as possible, it mostly uses the 2 weapons like in the puctures, but also involves hand combat like karate; Striking, throws, grappling. Philippine military uses this martial art.
Wow, that's very cool. :D
I feel like low kicks are over emphasized with muay thai. People seem to forget that muay thai uses elbows too... Most street brawls I have seen start with two people up close, nose to nose almost. Very well in range of an elbow.
That is true👍
@@nathearn what tier would you place kyokushin
Kali-Eskrima-Arnis is Filipino Martial Art and I have done a little bit of training. While it does have a lot to do with weapons, the first belt levels usually start with hand to hand combat.
50% explaining
30% "i dont want to desrespect any martial art"
20% "i could be wrong"
WELL IF SOMEONE IS PUTTING BOXING NO.1 ABOVE WRESTLING OR BJJ OR MUAY THAI THEN EITHER HE DOESN'T KNOW ANYTHING OR JUST KNOWS BOXING
As someone who does do traditional Japanese Ju-jitsu, I thought I should state that we do strikes and takedowns along with grappling. Since we do all three we do not have a main focus on them, our grappling is not as good as BJJ, our throws are not as good as judo and our strikes are not as good as karate but it seems to be good enough.
This was a Much needed video
I think that there is a component you’re missing when it comes to judging these arts in terms of their effectiveness for self defense. I think the goal of “self defense” is that you are leaving a dangerous encounter as safely as possible, which is not limited to engaging the attacker and defeating them, but also running away. One of the biggest advantages for grappling arts is that if you are attacked, you have the option to run away, and the only way for the attacker to stop you from running is to initiate grappling. This would allow you to take advantage of wrestling, BJJ or judo skills.
on 3:46 i totaly agree with you about boxing, i just wanted to add that you can hit any person doesnt mater what cloth you where is not like if you are a taekwando artist and you have jeans on you and you get into a street fight you are doomed.
the red symbol with the kanji down the middle is kyokushin 🥋
Thank you💪
And the one with the yin yang sign is probably JKD
@@sleepy4205 yes it is
Boxing and basics of wrestling is all you really need
Taekwondo and Any Leg Based Martial Art is your worst Enemy, A Bit of Boxing, Taekwondo and Ground Art Like Judo, Jiu Jitsu or Wrestling then Hell yeah
Kudo Is just mma, but with headbutts, that's why the helmet. It has kicks, punches, elbows, knees, throws and submissions. It's just mma, so put it next to it
Feel free to tell you Nat First of all you have to know the difference between Penchak silat and silat. Silat is a self-defense art used in the nusantara where there are many types of silat.while Penchak silat is a sport To highlight the culture and he set very strict rules to keep the game safe .1 point punch, 2 point kick, 3 point fall and when the player leaves the circle if I'm not mistaken it's 2 poin(can correct me if I'm wrong)
Why does Jujutsu go with BJJ for the same reasons? They are completely different things, traditional jujutsu was literally designed as a killing art for samurai. It's not the same pissy rolling around as BJJ
escrima is actually really good, it doesnt only train with weapons and it teaches u to use anything as a weapon
... on the last note 24:25 - "in street fights the loser go to the hospital and the winner goes to jail"
Exactly👍
Thanks Nat for being on time ❤❤
Nobody :
Me very excited to see this video
Also TH-cam ads : So what is Clickup? Clickup is
me : 😠
I recommend that as a martial artist you pick an art, assess it's weaknesses, then add another art/arts to your repertoire that covers the weak aspect of your favorite martial art and amplifies it's strengths.
tbh all complex martial arts need a very skilled master to do it , we are just common ppl , we can't do it at that level
but once a master starts doing it , you are f ed up bad
Well done on your closing comment on Judo :))) Made me very happy
Hahah no problem💪💪
I love the way he wrote: *_just run away bro_*
You gotta go on ultimate self defence championship season 3
FRRRRR
putting bjj 50/50 with karate is diabolical, so many fights end up on the ground
bruh maybe like 1% of fights
I would say "daido juku karate"(kudo) is S tier. headbutt, elbow, low kicks, grappling, full contact. I think kudo is the best form of karate. I like your videos, keep up to good work mate ☺️
Kudo is MMA with clothes, more applicable to the streets. You can throw and collar choke T-shirts.
its japanese mma because it's kyokushin karate mixed with judo
Any ground game oriented martial arts like wrestling and BJJ are 50/50. Against multiple people, you're done.
True.
That and you don't really train reflexes for blocking and dodging. Easier time catching a sucker punch before groundwork starts.
I agree on the multiple opponents, but i think in one on one scenarios, something like wrestling would be more effective since getting a takedown is more likely than an immediate k.o
Can you do rankings based on military efficiency? Use in war zones.
S tier: Krav Maga and any other one originally created specifically for military usage.
@JosephStalin-gvrr That would be all of them. Martial means military, hence martial law.
@@insanemakaioshin I doubt aikido would be very useful in a war zone…
@ True, but it was designed for that. Just badly.
I think you should make a short about just types of karate
16:10 That is Jeet Kun Do - The hybrid martial art system invented by Bruce Lee. His main philosophy of such was to learn and take something from every style and to be "like water" - Shapeless and formless, with the ability to adapt to any situation
Nice💪maybe I’ll do some research and make a video on it
@@nathearn I'd definitely recommend it. Bruce has such a rich tapestry of knowledge and personal philosophy of martial arts and life in general. Given his strong history of studying different styles like Boxing, Karate, Wing Chung, Tai Chi, taekwondo, etc, and how he helped popularise many of them in the west, it makes sense that many martial artists and professional fighters regard him as a strong influence and 'the godfather of MMA', as he layed the groundwork for the idea for Martial artists to branch out and learn different techniques to improve their game as well as themselves. Even the likes of Sugar Ray Leonard and Manny Pacquiao were inspired by him, including how they learned to perfect their jab and maintain rhythm and speed.
th-cam.com/video/nzQWYHHqvIw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=RvQsMmtYihQD2RNk
wish there was a way for us to hang out
but seriously we need one community for teachers so the techniques become stronger and easier to reach
I thing for sure even though taekwondo is like 50/50 you ether lose or win if you land your kicks but if you master it you look like a badass
6:03, i agree with the ranking but for different reasons, since muay thai has elbows unlike kickboxing, it obviously is pretty effective to use elbows and we arent just trained to use kicks n stuff but, you can use teeps, clinch, elbows and allat, plus the traditional muay thai stance has the hands facing the opponent but, in european countries they teach you to turn your punches and ur hands dont face your opponent, plus think about all the options of like flying knees, flying elbows, superman punches n stuff, muay thai is like 60% of MMA.
I don't train Krav Maga but sparred against some already and its really hard to judge. Its a military martial art so its focused on destroying your opponent. But most schools teach it different to others so there is no consistency. I got krav maga guys that dominated almost everyone but I got Krav maga guys that would lose to Akaido (sarcasm, no one loses to akaido. But you get the point.)
i feel like aikido heavily suffers from mcdojos because of how focused on using the opponents energy against them.
i do aikido and have been doing so for 4 years now and my Sensei who has been practicing for 21 years is one of the most skilled martial artists i’ve ever seen.
i think it is all about who trains you and how you train.
as you’ve mentioned mcdojos brings down the effectiveness of the art as they become more prevalent and are seen more than proper dojos.
all a matter of opinion,
overall a good video.
good job :)
Yes but the real problem with aikido McDojos goes all the way to the top. I started in aikido like 15 years ago and my aikido has only gotten better by learning other arts. The foundation of Aikido is very shaky right now. I’m glad you’ve found a good sensei.
@@JBIsrael i agree wholeheartedly. with aikido you get to the level of no touch when you are in a mcdojo and that can be very unhelpful to both yourself and the art.
i also do Kung-Fu and have found that it enhances what i already know in aikido.
as my Sensei says there is only so many ways you can move your body, so all martial arts must have the same principles.
i hope you continue to do aikido and improve :)
have a good one
I'm a Taekwondo athlete and we learn traditional tkd .we use many hand strikes and were more affective at self defence than modern Olympic Taekwondo.
Same my guy
This is Kyokushin Karate 🔥 17:14
Thanks💪
I don't want to hate, but the whole reason he said that jiu-jitsu was a 50-50 was because it always went to the ground. I'm not sure if he thinks that they start on the ground. But if you were to watch dignified jiu-jitsu it would be a combination of wrestling and judo. I don't want to seem like one of those people who just sit at their computer all day and make up these crazy stories and talk trash to the creators (again no hate), but some of these are being extremely unfairly ranked.
hollow. purple
I do jiu jutsu but we have kicks and punches and my master is’t a starter he won 1 wb
Nice video, as a krav maga practitioner i can say that that is a right ranking since it's difficult as a beginner to not find a mcdojo, nowdays krav maga became popular, and so the fake teachers.
The real krav maga is semplicity and takes concepts from other diciplines.
I've seen multiple systema video but the Systema video shown in this video looks more so like aggravated assault as opposed to being self defense.
Nat I think you should look more into Kali or Eskrima more. It's a Filipino martial art mainly using weapons but it also has empty hand combat. In my opinion it's one of the best for self-defense as it also helps when your enemy has a weapon at hand. You can disarm them using this martial art. It also has a blend of Karate, when you look at in a way, it is Filipino Karate. Focusing on fast paced usage of arnis sticks and knives but the same principles also apply in empty hand combat.
Wing Chun is a powerful attack, they do palm strikes which are terrifying in power. They are defensive and counter when you throw a punch, and they aim with punches to your chest to reduce injury. Wing Chun I believe would go in Probably Would Work
Also JKD should be at least above average
I get it, you like Ip man films. But the answer is no. A guy bear hugs you, how are you going to throw that punch or perform any type of style? Even if you can throw that punch, it won't be a Wing Chun punch, but any punch for that matter.
Shoutout to you bro. Brave enough to do one of these kinds of videos. The comments are gonna behave like you're ranking for humanity itself...
As always, people judge Capoeira without really knowing anything about it. The spinning around thing is the equivalent of a demonstration, sometimes used by more experienced students to help others learn more complex movements, it's a little game from the more cultural aspect of the art. When you fight, you aren't dancing like that, you don't even necessarily need the ginga, there are punchs, grabs, elbows, knees, etc. It's basically MMA with slightly different footwork and more spinning kicks.
The only downside for Capoeira is slow spinning kicks :(
@@Virdye01 You can call them easy to read but slow? Regardless, Capoeira has far more than just spinning kicks
@@unnwas Yewa :D
My issue with Muay Thai in the US is that they don't really teach defense, it's all about conditioning. Obviously if someone goes to the gym daily and they are serious about their Muay Thai training, they eventually grow to a decent fighter, but for the casual? I don't recommend Muay Thai for the casual, because Muay Thai is a 100% combo sport which is different from self defense. Some of their training methods I also question, they often drill random combos, sometimes with defense drilled in. Other kickboxing styles like Savate and Dutch-kickboxing, they drill the same combo over and over again until you get it down. For self-defense the other kickboxing styles like Savate, Sanda, and Dutch Kickboxing are better. Also I think a legit Karate Dojo is better for self-defense than Muay Thai.
In Savate they teach you how and when to strike an approaching opponent, they teach that in Dutch kickboxing as well, they don't teach that in Muay Thai.
That's where I disagree. Karate is bullshit. Muay thai is way better for self defense
@timothysmith1631 Well it depends on the dojo and the style. I think Kyokushin, Uechi-Ryu and Goju-Ryu are really good, and there are dozens of other ones that are good for self-defense. Ashihara kaikan an off-shoot of Kyokushin will make you a good fighter, and Kudo as well. But I also agree your typical Karate gym in the US is not better than Muay Thai for self-defense, but there is also a lot of good gyms, so you have do your research and find them.
We need you to get on season three of the USDC
I like that bro didn't watch the systema guy use a gun💀💀
16:14 Hey Nat, this one here is Jeet Kune Do, Bruce Lee's martial art. "The Way Of The Intercepting Fist" Is the translation.
I'm from Europe (Moscow) and I'm very surprised that all English-speaking bloggers knew smth about "Systema" martial art. In my country there are no (or maybe very few) clubs of this martial art. It was popularized in 1990s also with "Slavic self-defense", "Martial hopak", "Cossack dvobiy", "Rus' combat", "Kadochnikov's system" etc. freak pseudo-ancient or Russian National martial arts. All of these are forgotten now. More then: due the United Sport Classification systems in all Eastern European countries clubs of pseudo-sports have no chance to become popular because lack of funding, competitions and PR. Their athletes can't parcicipiate in official competitions, get the National Champion title etc.
you missed maybe the most mainly advantage of muay thai in the street...
chilnch.
not everything always work as you wish and someone can grab you (aspecialy from behind) and its very useful (especialy elbows)
As a BJJ guy, starting from the ground is a giant misconception. Yeah, there are a lot of people who get taught like that, but if you find an actual good coach, you'll learn to do both standing and grounded fighting. The place I train at specifically does BJJ mostly, but there will be nights where we do Muay Thai. I feel like Muay Thai and BJJ is a great combination. That's just me though lol.
Tbh I have to say BJJ would be a "probably would work" cause in BJJ you do start standing, and then you take your fight to the ground.
Basic Takedowns we learn to put down people are mostly shared techniques either from wrestling or judo, but generally the ones taught for BJJ are on the ground that's why it's always known as the ground martial arts.
Bro this guy is so kind, always saying “I don’t mean to offend”
18:03 fun fact : pencak silat is the sport/artistic form of silat. Compare it and you'll see the difference
And they also do punches but for some reason they don't use it in the video
Orang putih kurang faham
Hey Nat I just want to thank you for the stretching routine. Bought it about 8 weeks ago and i was one of the least flexible people I knew, but just recently I made the milestone of being able to touch my toes! Still not finished with it though
Nice💪💪keep going with it, it sounds like it’s going completely to plan so far👊
Wrestling should be s tier. I say this as a judoka. They just train harder and they're the most athletic of any martial art. Your average wrestler is a monster that knows how to suplex you in seconds. Unless you practice anti wrestling you're kind of screwed
Facts wrestling and judo compliment eachother.
Definitely, best arts for defense are
1) Run away Fu
2) Wrestling
Wrestlers know the takedowns for judo like throws trips and sweeps but also adding single, double legs and suplexes and body locks. Also you end the fight by pinning them on the ground when they cannot move anymore. They are very explosive and one slam you’re finished.
Put it like this. A lightweight boxer will struggle to beat a heavyweight random on the street. A lightweight wrestler will absolutely DESTROY a heavyweight random on the street. Watch that video of Bradley Martyn wrestle that one dude. The dude beat him. Now imagine Bradley Martyn vs Devin Haney. Haney gets SMACKED by Bradley.
@@hanzo7616 a middle weight can beat a heavy weight even if they both have skills but if the middle weight is overall better at skill and faster. Better technique too middle weight will win plus middle weight r probs the perfect weight not to heavy but still built well and not light either. Btw I don't think U really wanna grapple with someone who is way bigger than U especially wrestling at light weight🤣
remembering that in a real situation you are without gloves. A boxer's punch should never be underestimated. Besides, boxers can handle being beaten
spinjutsu tops all
Welcome back Sensei, I hope the travel back to home was not very stressful 😉 I hope you will make another video about your most recent experiences there in the last days of your stay, I can't wait to see👍😉
Thank you💪I’ll hopefully be going out there again soon actually
@@nathearn Mind You, tear it up Man!💪🔝
Guys imagine Bruce Lee would still live and do videos like that. Would be epic
And his Jeet Kune Do was there so what tier will it be. Jeet Kune Do is still not complete by Bruce Lee
@@BitoTheNiceGuy Yeah of course Bruce Lee would have developed it over time because of modern scientific knowledge etc. but it‘s was so superior in those days that it is still up to date and very effective for street fighting
@@fuchsroehre9 yes Jeet Kune Do should be in the S tier because it has (Wing Chun, Western Boxing, Western Wrestling, Western Fencing, Indian Wrestling, Judo, Taekwondo, Tai Chi, Choy Li Fut and Eskrima) that's a lot of martial art that was combined together
@@BitoTheNiceGuy Well in the last stage of his Jeet Kune Do it was nearly no Wing Chun anymore. It was mainly boxing with fencing footwork and a little bit of wrestling too. It was just pure science and he used only the most effective aspects of each art.
@@BitoTheNiceGuyBut yeah, obviously S tier because it‘s simple, no classical mess and useless movements. It‘s straight forward and answers almost every kind of attack your can get on the street
Nat you should make sparring videos everyone will love that
I wanna see those
Nat those you didn't know were Jett kune do (Bruce Lee style) and Kyokushin
Sanda is a Chinese kickboxing style created by the Chinese military using traditional Wushu/ Gong Fu techniques and made it more adapted to modern sport fighting. A lot of the grappling from the style is actually from taijiquan
The yellow orange yin yang is for jeet kun do
Nat ,the one with 2 weapons logo is Kali ,you start off learning motions with weapons,simultaneously learning the same motions for empty hand defense
16:10 That’s Jeet Kune Do created by the legend Bruce Lee
I mean... yea, not saying JKD is anything, but if one does not know what that is ... why am i even paying attention.
Bro this video's NICE! I really need this video
that's kyokushin karate that red circle with black japanese name, i was waiting for you to rank it because i do it myslef, it's rated most brutal karate style and it's basiclly full contact karate, in compettitions knees,elbows and punches to the face aren't allowed but we train those too (knees and little bit of elbows, punches to the face only basic belt technique)
knees on the face do are allowed
@@MrKarate_11 no, knees yes, i forgot, are allowed in competitions but to face no, to side of head - yes (waza-ari)
Love Nat 🐐🐐💨💨
blue hoodie 💙💙💙
Very good tier list. I practice Judo as a child, later Boxing and actually Taekwondo Itf and a few of Kickboxing. Im sure that Bjj is not very good in the stree. Put your self in the hard asfalt and with probably other enemy up yours that can kicking easily. Judo is better because use more throws and sweeps, much faster and secure for the user. Boxeo is the best in streets, there are thousand of videos that demonstrate 👏👍💪🥊🥋
BJJ also practices a huge variety of throws and takedowns, you don't have to grapple them on the ground. I'd say BJJ would work quite well on a one on one street fight mainly because you can take them down just as well as judo practitioners whilst also having the techniques to knock them out or break their arm. Even with all this, I still practice kickboxing on the side just incase things get a bit too risky.
Ju-jitsu should be a bit higher because they teach strikes (the leg ones are a bit off) but most people in ju-jitsu can throw a punch and also they can get anyone who doesn’t have a good leg stance on the floor in seconds (most street fights)
love this video but its funny how he tries his best not to make anyone mad ( not saying thats a bad thing )
Sambo is basicly russian judo
Combat sambo is basicly kickboxing, but your allowed to kick like your a football player
Combat sambo is basically russian MMA, you're still allowed to grapple in it and it's more wrestling based. from the information i know, correct me if i'm wrong.
Hey bro original Japanese jiu jitstu has striking sparring weapons. Jiu jitsu is where judo and bjj come from. So you would have to switch the spots of judo and jiu-jitsu.
I just posted a similar comment, u are absolutely right. As a jjj practisioner I was like, but we DO KICKSSSSS
As a boxing practitioner…hell yea!!
Krav maga is S tier.
As a soldier i can assure you this shit works.
The civilian version of Krav maga is the most widespread and designed to teach someone to defend themself against basic attacks from an untrained attacker. Yes it is agressive and you'll work from reflexes, but the idea behind it is to use force and get out of the situation asap.
That's why most of the civil KM practitioners will lose a fight against a trained striker or grappler. They will block, evade and counterattack
cobra kai season 6 fights need to be reviewed frfr
God tier: ameridote
Top tier :: Gun-fu ; Run jutsu ; kevlar shirt.
Rest martial arts practioner : just to be safe run away.
And some others : don't bother just surrender
Could you do a tier list of what weapon martial is the best. Like fencing and staff fighting and so on.
That martial art where it's red and yellow yin yang is probably Jeet Kune Do.
Nice Rant, Especially about Aikido being in the lowest, I Just Can't Believe That My Dad Forces Me to Believe that Aikido Is Better Than Krav Maga, and Ninjutsu Is Literally Just Avoiding a Fight so I Might've placed It a Little Higher, And The Ninjutsu Moves shown In The Video are Highly Dependent On The Practitioner's Reflex and Speed So I might Agree On You Putting It On Not The Best
bro forgot spinjitsu
spinjitsu is in a tier so high that we cant even see it
17:15 Its kyokushin karate and pencak silat have many variation like PSHT (Persaudaraan Setia Hati Terate), Kera Sakti, PPSNR (Perguruan Pencak Silat Nur Rachmat),PSHW (Persaudaraan Setia Hati Winorogo), Tarung Drajat. And there is have 200+ kinds of Pencak Silat
You just need decent hands, whilst boxing is good - it's not good if you can close the distance or keep them away with push kicks, or get them with kicks. Let's be honest, in a streetfight there are no rules like MMA or others, so you're going to kick, grab, punch all rolled together.
If you have some basic knowledge of push kicks, leg kicks, punching and a few throws most martial artists (especially those that compete) in a 1-on-1 situation is likely to be ok.
I agree with your muay thai ranking but for a different reason. I think our weakness is grappling more than striking.
Grew up with Karate as a third generation practitioner. I've done Muay Thai, Judo, Boxing, Taijutsu, and a tiny bit of Wing Chun. I do respect Aikido, but it's not for combat at all; it's solely for the moments before a fight. Karate 1000% depends not only on the practitioner, but the style as well. Some are designed for combat over form. Muay Thai is made to break the opponent with striking versatility; art of the 8 limbs. Taijitsu is in the same boat as Karate, though strictly designed for combat. Basically, any striking art should be fine in a street fight. I'm not a fan of grappling or taking the fight to the ground in a street fight UNLESS it's a 1v1.
In my much more narrow-minded oppinion(taekwondo,karate and judo),it also HIGHLY depends on your own experience and who are you fighting.In a 1v1 if your opponent does not know any matrial art but is just physically much stronger taking a fight to the ground or grappling is not an option,because risky,no matter how good you are,some grapplings just won`t work if the opponent sees it coming and opposes,unless you are REALLY good.Just throwing the poor dude and running away is in my oppinion better,will work,if your opponent doesn`t know how to oppose some throws or not get into position to be thrown-no chance.Physical power doesn`t matter,weight does,and really good judo guys can throw up to 2-3x own weight.Also(at least in my oppinion) not every striking art can fit to the street fight,ofc hit and run always works great,but reallisically speaking,dudes who attack you are sometimes drunk,and it`s a known fact that drunk people do not feel pain the same way.Basically,if a drunk person is already drunk enough to attack you fo no particular reason,they will fight untill knocked out or physically incapable to.Some striking matrial arts do not provide enough contact for a student to be able to knockout a person no gear without injuring themselves.
@БогданЗмиевской-с2е I'm a heavy advocate for Judo. I merely meant that taking it to the ground as in Jiujitsu is a bad idea mainly because in concrete and the possibility of extra assailants jumping in. But fighting anyone who isn't a good enough fighter, any striking should be good enough to defend yourself.
@@VAPExodus If we are talking a healthy sober agressive human who does not know what he os doing i agree 100%.I would also say that even tho i concider myself quite experienced i will NEVER try to fight back with bare hands in a group v 1 situation,I guess it`s even fair to say that if it is a group of people and you can`t just hit everyone real fast and run only running away works.Anyway,thank you for your opinion.
I'd put Muay Thai at the top (totally hot take, I know) because in my experience, it's taught with street fights in mind and you can stick to the hands if you need to.
And BJJ would go lower😂
Also, I think Krav is very underrated here, I'd put it top because not all locks are for the street.
They teach to go for the... "places where the sun don't shine" and temples etc. And practical things like how one hit will end most fights - and MANY specific scenarios: I was once there long enough to see in my old "dojo" scenarios for break ins (it totally deserves some skits)
"if it's taught in the right way"
Oof, I guess I didn't listen 😂🤣
BJJ would absolutely destroy Muay Thai not even close.
@@DouglasGomesBueno 🤣